01/05/2012
The
emergence of multifrequency force microscopy
By: Omar Gómez Rojas ID:139236
In atomic force microscopy a cantilever with a sharp
tip attached to it is scanned over the surface of a sample, and information
about the surface is extracted by measuring how the deflection of the
cantilever — which is caused by interactions between the tip and the surface —
varies with position. In the most common form of atomic force microscopy,
dynamic force microscopy, the cantilever is made to vibrate at a specific
frequency, and the deflection of the tip is measured at this frequency. But the
motion of the cantilever is highly nonlinear, and in conventional dynamic force
microscopy, information about the sample that is encoded in the deflection at
frequencies other than the excitation frequency is irreversibly lost.
Multifrequency force microscopy involves the excitation and/or detection of the
deflection at two or more frequencies, and it has the potential to overcome
limitations in the spatial resolution and acquisition times of conventional
force microscopes. Here we review the development of five different modes of
multifrequency force microscopy and examine its application in studies of
proteins, the imaging of vibrating nanostructures, measurements of ion
diffusion and subsurface imaging in cells.
Find more information on this work in: http://www.nature.com/nnano/journal/v7/n4/full/nnano.2012.38.html
Nature Nanotechnology 7, 217–226 (2012)
The emergence of multifrequency force microscopy
IMM—Instituto
de Microelectrónica de Madrid, CSIC, Isaac Newton 8, 28760 Tres Cantos, Madrid,
Spain
Ricardo Garcia & Elena T. Herruzo
Published online 01 April 2012
DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2012.38
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